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St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra Concert
St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra Concert
  • Performed by: St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra
  • Hosted by:Shenzhen Concert Hall
  • Time:2024-05-18 ( Saturday) 20:00
  • Address:Symphony Hall, Shenzhen Concert Hall
  • Price(RMB):1380(VIP)/1280/1080/880/780/680/580/480/380/280
Warm Prompt:
  • Children under the age of six and 1.2 meters will not be admitted,Each audience should have a ticket regardless of age
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  • Please go to the Shenzhen Concert Hall Box Office to purchase ticket.
  • Address: 2016, Fuzhong 1st Road, Futian District, Shenzhen
  • Business Hours: 9:00 – 20:30 Daily, 9:00 – the end of performance on Performance Day
  • Performance Introduction
  • Performances
Warm Prompt:
Children under the age of six or 1.2 meters will not be admitted. Each audience should have a ticket (ID card is also needed) regardless of the age.
 

St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra
The distinguished Orchestra of Russia, Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, the oldest symphony orchestra in Russia, in the 2022/2023 season celebrated the 140th anniversary of its foundation. History of the Orchestra which, according to foreign reviews, “is among the world’s elite and, without a doubt, historically the most important orchestra in Russia”, began with the decree of Alexander III on 16 July 1882, which initiated the creation of the Court Musicians Choir. Transformed into the Court Orchestra at the beginning of the XX century, for the first time in Russia, the orchestra performed the symphonic poems Ein Heldenleben and Also sprach Zarathustra by Richard Strauss, Mahler's First Symphony and Bruckner's Ninth Symphony, Scriabin's Poem of Ecstasy and Stravinsky’s First Symphony. A. Nikisch and R. Strauss conducted the orchestra as well as A. Glazunov, who dedicated the Festival Overture to the orchestra. In 1917, the Court Orchestra became the State Orchestra, and was headed by S. Koussevitzky.
 
In 1921, the orchestra, given the hall of the former Noble Assembly at its disposal, opened the country's first Philharmonia. The unprecedented in scale activities of the orchestra drew a new and sometimes far removed from classical music audience to its Grand Hall. Outstanding Russian musicians underwent a rigorous test of their conducting skills with the orchestra. Such legendary Western conductors as B. Walter, F. Weingartner, H. Abendroth, O. Fried, E. Kleiber, P. Monteux and O. Klemperer; soloists V. Horowitz and S. Prokofiev, performed with the orchestra. The orchestra mastered a vast contemporary repertoire. In 1918, it presented the premiere of Prokofiev’s Classical Symphony, and in 1926 – Shostakovich’s First Symphony. In 1934, the orchestra – the first in the country – was awarded the title of Distinguished Orchestra of Russia.
 
1938 ushered in a half-century of the “Age of Mravinsky” – years of hard work, which earned the orchestra a place among the most prominent orchestras of the world. In 1946, the orchestra embarked on its first foreign trip – and gave its first overseas performance in the country’s symphonic performance history. This was followed by regular tours around the world, performing at the most prestigious European festivals. A unique and creative alliance formed between D. Shostakovich and E. Mravinsky, to whom the composer devoted the Eighth Symphony. The conductor and the orchestra performed five Shostakovich's symphonies for the first time. In fact, a tradition of an original interpretation of famous scores was born. Music of the twentieth century as a whole assumed a significant role in the orchestra’s repertoire. Alternating as the second conductor of the orchestra were K. Sanderling, A. Jansons and M. Jansons; at the podium were L. Stokowski, L. Maazel, Z. Mehta, K. Masur, E. Svetlanov, G. Rozhdestvensky and composers B. Britten, A. Copland, Z. Kodály, W. Lutosławski, L. Berio, K. Penderecki, and soloists: V. Cliburn, G. Gould, A. Benedetti Michelangeli, I. Stern, S. Richter, E. Gilels, D. Oistrakh, E. Virsaladze, N. Petrov, G. Sokolov, V. Tretyakov, L. Kogan, N. Gutman, V. Krainev, V. Spivakov and A. Lyubimov.
 
Since 1988, Yuri Temirkanov has headed the orchestra. From year to year, the results of the musicians’ collaboration receive enthusiastic press reviews. “The orchestra is a Russian national treasure, conductor Yuri Temirkanov one of the best in the world” (The Washington Post, 2014). “If the St Petersburg Philharmonic’s all-Russian first Prom was a hard act to follow, its second, also under chief conductor Yuri Temirkanov, brought yet another feast of idiomatic Russian playing” (The Guardian, 2015). “This is a unique orchestra with a special, “Leningrad” sound ...” (Codalario, 2016). “The performance of Shostakovich's Fifth Symphony was “the culmination of that high, Petersburg sound culture, for which the St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra is famous. (...) A brilliant scherzo and a spectacular, technically perfect finale brought the audience into a total frenzy, which is completely natural: a grandiose sound fresco appeared before it, which hardly any other conductor or orchestra in the world could create” (Corriere della Sera, 2017). “No matter what was happening in Russia over the last thirty years, this orchestra has always remained in the top-ranking categories” (Seenandheard-international.com, 2019).
 
The orchestra's extensive touring activities during last seasons have included concerts at the Paris Théâtre des Champs-Elysées and the Vienna Musikverein, the Berlin, Munich, Elbe, Luxembourg Philharmonics and Frankfurt Alte Oper, the Royal Festival Hall in London, The Usher Hall of Edinburgh, The Bridgewater Hall of Manchester and The City Hall of Leeds, The Victoria Hall in Geneva, Palau de la Musica Catalana in Barcelona and the Santa Cecilia Hall in Rome, Tokyo Suntory Hall, Taipei National Concert Hall, Seoul Arts Center, Beijing National Performing Arts Center and the Grand Hall of the Moscow Conservatory.
 
In September 2019 the St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Ion Marin, Vassily Sinaisky and Yuri Temirkanov gave concerts in Italy and Switzerland (soloists O. Mustonen and N. Freire), Bucharest and Paris (soloists V. Repin, B. Rana, B. Berezovsky), visited Estonia (conductor N. Alexeev, soloist S. Dogadin), in January 2020 – gave four concerts in Spain under the baton of maestro Temirkanov (soloists N. Lugansky, B. Abduraimov), participated in the MITO SettembreMusica and George Enescu festivals.
 
In January 2022 Yuri Temirkanov resigned as Principal Conductor of the St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra, still remaining Artistic Director of both the orchestra and the St Petersburg Philharmonia – he has been occupying this position for more than two decades. Nikolay Alexeev, who has been collaborating with the Orchestra for over twenty years, has subsequently become the orchestra’s Principal Conductor.
 
The orchestra’s repertoire is constantly updated with new, including modern compositions – among them they have performed for the first time in Russia: the First Symphony The Triumph of Heaven and fantasy Wunderbare Leiden by Borisova-Ollas, the nocturne Sur le meme accord and La nuit etoilée by Dutilleux, and the Piano Concerto Century Rolls and Shaker Loops by Adams, Giya Kancheli’s Letters to Friends, Widmann’s Babylon-Suite, as well as Ligeti’s Ramifications for string orchestra and Concert românesc.
 
The orchestra opens the 2023/2024 concert season on September 25, the birthday of D.D. Shostakovich. Rachmaninoff’s Isle of the Dead and Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini (soloist D. Shishkin) and the Shostakovich’s Tenth Symphony (on the occasion of the 70th anniversary of the premiere) will be played under the direction of chief conductor N. Alexeev. Traditional subscription cycles – "Yuri Temirkanov’s Orchestra" and "First Symphony Orchestra of Russia" – in the new season are timed to coincide with the 85th anniversary of maestro Yuri Temirkanov. Only within the framework of these subscriptions, the poster of the orchestra includes symphonies of Haydn, Brahms, Dvorak, Bruckner, Mahler, Prokofiev and Shostakovich, Verdi’s Requiem, Lutosławski’s Concerto for Orchestra, piano concerts of Beethoven, Liszt, Tchaikovsky, Rachmaninoff, Prokofiev, Violin concerto by Sibelius, symphonic fragments from Wagner's operas. The list of soloists features D. Matsuev, N. Lugansky, E. Virsaladze, I. Bessonov, H. Kazazyan, as well as the XVII International Tchaikovsky Competition III Prize winner I. Papoyan and the International Rachmaninoff Competition I Prize winner A. Klyuchko. In concerts of the new cycle dedicated to the 200th anniversary of Bruckner, the Distinguished Orchestra will perform the Third (Wagner), Seventh and Ninth symphonies of the composer. Two evenings will be dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the Leningrad complete liberation from the fascists’ blockade.
 
The one-evening performance of two Brahms’ Piano concertos (soloist P. Laul), Schönberg's symphonic poem Pelleas und Melisande (to the 150th anniversary of the composer), Beethoven’s Missa solemnis (to the 200th anniversary of the premiere), Bach's Johannes Passion (to the 300th anniversary of the premiere), Haydn's Die Schöpfung, Ligeti's Piano concerto (to the 100th anniversary of the composer) and Nono’s Epitaffio 2 auf Federico García Lorca flute and chamber orchestra concerto (marking the 100th anniversary of the composer) are among the bright repertoire events.
In December 2023, the Distinguished Orchestra will take part in the next Arts Square International Festival, this year it is dedicated to Yuri Temirkanov’s anniversary. In collaboration with the Bolshoi Theatre Choir the opening concert will be conducted by N. Alexeev featuring a performance of Shostakovich's Thirteenth Symphony and Schumann's Cello Concerto (bass A. Tikhomirov and cellist A. Ramm will perform as soloists). The festival will end with a gala concert for the anniversary of the Maestro, A. Rudin, N. Lugansky, E. Leonskaja (Austria), H. Gerzmava, V. Repin, Yu. Bashmet will take part in it.
 
The list of the guest conductors of the orchestra includes I. Marin (Austria), H. Graf (Austria), P. Bubelnikov, F. Korobov, A. Rudin, D. Botinis, L. Krämer (Germany), A. Chernushenko, V. Borisov and others. The soloists feature pianists D. Matsuev, N. Lugansky, E. Virsaladze, E. Leonskaja, B. Berezovsky, A. Gindin, I. Bessonov, D. Shishkin, M. Kultyshev, F. Kopachevsky, P. Raikerus, I. Papoyan; violinists V. Repin, H. Kazazyan, N. Borisoglebsky, I. Ioff; flutist S. Viland; cellist A. Ramm; singers H. Gerzmava, A. Tikhomirov, Yu. Vorobyov, A. Denisova, B. Stepanov, I. Vasiliev.
The orchestra continues its touring activities. In August 2023, performances were held in Sochi and Nalchik (conductor N. Alexeev), and in June 2023, after a three-year break, foreign tours of the Distinguished Orchestra took place. Under the direction of N. Alexeev, Rachmaninoff's music was played in seven large cities of China. The Tchaikovsky Competition winner pianist D. Kharitonov played solo part. For the current season, tours of the orchestra in China are planned again, as well as performances in Krasnoyarsk and Moscow.
 


Conductor: Nikolay Alexeev
People's Artist of Russia, Chief Conductor of the St Petersburg Philharmonia Nikolay Alexeev graduated from the Leningrad choir school named after M.I.Glinka and the Leningrad Conservatory as a choral (class of A. Mikhaylov) and opera-symphonic conductor (class of A. Jansons). He had his traineeship at the Kirov (Mariinsky) Opera under Yuri Temirkanov.
 
Winner of the Herbert von Karajan Foundation’s International Competition (West Berlin, 1982), V.Talich Competition (Prague, 1985) and Min-On (Tokyo, 1985), the musician’s life is full of artistic events. He led the Zagreb Philharmonic Orchestra; performed with the Moscow Philharmonic orchestra, the Tchaikovsky Symphony and Russian National orchestras; worked with such foreign companies as the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, the Rotterdam, Dresden, Stuttgart, and Copenhagen Philharmonic orchestras, the Berlin and Baltimore symphony orchestras, the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra, the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, and the New Japan Philharmonic.
 
In 2001–2010 he led the Pribaltic’s oldest Estonian National Symphony Orchestra (in 2006 he was awarded the 3rd degree Estonian order of the White star for his work with the orchestra, and in 2010 he received the Estonian Republic’s prize in the sphere of culture).
 
The conductor's concert activities cover the countries of Europe (Germany, France, Italy, Great Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands, Finland, Slovenia, Greece, Latvia, Lithuania), Latin America, South Korea, Japan and the USA. From 2018 till January 2024 Nikolay Alexeev was the Principal Conductor of the Ulsan Philharmonic Orchestra (Republic of Korea) – the first foreign conductor in the history of the orchestra to lead it.
 
Since 2000, Nikolay Alexeev has been the conductor of the St Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra. In 2022 he took over the position of the orchestra’s Chief Conductor. Since 2024 – the Chief Conductor of the Philharmonia.
 
Nikolay Alexeev and the orchestra performed all of the Brahms' symphonies and Ein Deutsches Requiem, a number of works by Stravinsky and Prokofiev, including a rarely performed Cantata for the 20th Anniversary of the October Revolution, Mahler's Eighth Symphony, called Symphony of a Thousand, Schoenberg’s Gurrelieder and Messiaen’s Turangalila, Hindemith’s Mathis der Maler, Janacek’s Taras Bulba and Glagolitic Mass. Maestro regularly introduces new works to the public. He conducted a number of premiere performances: Tishchenko’s Second and Fifth Dante Symphonies, Slonimsky’s Thirteenth Symphony, Korolev’s Figure of Speech and Heretic, Korchmar’s Tsar's Chants; Russian premieres of Borisova-Ollas’s First Symphony The Triumph of Heaven and Wunderbare Leiden, Varenbergh’s Romeo and Juliet fantasies for piano and orchestra, inspired by Rachmaninov’s Symphony № 1, St Petersburg premieres of Shchedrin's Concerto Cantabile and Paganini’s Fifth violin concerto.
 
In 2017, the conductor was awarded the Prize of the St Petersburg Government for the concert programs of 2016. In February 2022, by the President’s decree Nikolay Alexeev was awarded the Order of Friendship for his great contribution to the cultural and artistic development of the country and for the long years of fruitful activity.
 
The conductor's performances opened and closed the last three seasons, two of which were dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Philharmonic. On 9 August 2022 the conductor led the performance of the Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony by the united St. Petersburg Symphony Orchestra within the framework of the Memory Score, a music and history project dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the siege premiere of the symphony. In December 2022, the opening concert of the XXII Arts Square International Winter Festival (soloist D. Matsuev) took place under the baton of Nikolay Alexeev. Also, the programs dedicated to the 140th anniversary of the Distinguished Orchestra of Russia, the anniversaries of Sergei Rachmaninoff (soloist N. Lugansky) and Evgeny Mravinsky (soloist Y. Stanchul) were the past season’s memorable events.
 
In the 2023/2024 season’s poster – the opening concert with pianist D. Shishkin (the program featured music by Rachmaninoff and Shostakovich's Tenth Symphony (for the 70th anniversary of the premiere)), performance of Shostakovich's Thirteenth Symphony at the opening of the XXIII Arts Square Festival dedicated to the Memory of maestro Yuri Temirkanov, with participation of the Bolshoi Theatre Choir (soloist A.Tikhomirov), and Shostakovich's Seventh Symphony to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the Leningrad complete siege lifting on January 27, 2024, a concert from the works of Tchaikovsky and Prokofiev with D.Matsuev, piano concerts by Beethoven and Prokofiev with the participation of N.Lugansky and I.Papoyan, as well as Mahler's First Symphony, Prokofiev’s Sixth Symphony, Rachmaninoff's Symphonic Dances.
 
In September 2022, the Distinguished Orchestra under the leadership of Nikolay Alexeev toured in Sochi, in August 2023 – again in Sochi and Nalchik, and in June 2023, under the direction of the conductor, a foreign tour was held in seven major cities of China. In October 2023, Nikolay Alexeev held two concerts with the Distinguished Orchestra at the Dmitry Hvorostovsky International Festival in Krasnoyarsk.
 
The conductor's actively cooperating with the Philharmonia’s academic symphony orchestra, opening and closing the orchestra's seasons, performing with such soloists as pianists B.Douglas, E.Leonskaja, E.Virsaladze, E.Mechetina, violinist S.Dogadin and cellists N.Hakhnazaryan, Z.Fung, and touring as well. In the 2019/2020 season they had two foreign tours: China (September 2019) and Latvia (March 2020, along with State St Petersburg Eifmann Ballet Theatre). This new season Nikolay Alexeev once again opened the Academic Symphony Orchestra's season, pianist F.Kopachevsky performed in the opening concert along with the conductor.
 

Soloist: Ilia Papoian
A native of St. Petersburg (2001), a graduate of the Secondary Special Music School of the St. Petersburg Rimsky-Korsakov State Conservatory (class of Olga Kurnavina, then class of Alexander Sandler), currently a student of the St. Petersburg State Conservatory (class of Professor Alexander Sandler).
 
At the age of 9 he became a laureate of the F. Chopin International Youth Competition (St. Petersburg, 2010). At the age of 13 he gave his first solo concert on the stage of the State Academic Capella of St. Petersburg. Laureate of The International Chopin Competition for Young Pianists (Narva, 2016; I Prize and Prize of the EMCY), The International Tchaikovsky Youth Competition (Astana, 2017; II Prize and Special Prize for the best performance of Bach's work), The Astana Piano Passion International Competition for Young Pianists (Astana, 2017; III Prize), The AllRussian Music Competition (Moscow, 2018; III Prize), The All-Russian competition "Young Talents of Russia" (Moscow, 2019; II Prize), The All-Russian Interuniversity competition "Piano Today" at the St. Petersburg State Conservatory (St. Petersburg, 2020; I prize), The V International competition "City of Vigo - Galicia" (Spain, 2021; I prize and Audience Award), participant of The X International Competition named after Franz Liszt (Weimar, 2021; prize – a grant to study at the Higher Music School named after Franz Liszt in Weimar), The I Rachmaninoff International Competition for Pianists, Composers and Conductors (Moscow, 2022; III Prize), The XVII International Tchaikovsky Competition (Moscow, 2023; III Prize).
 
Participated in master-classes by Andrey Diev, Grigory Gruzman, Pavel Nersesian, Alexander Mndoiants. Recipient of a Presidential Grant, current member of the Youth Section of the Association of Laureates of the International Tchaikovsky Competition, soloist of the St. Petersburg House of Music since 2016, scholarship holder of the Artis Futura Foundation since 2021.
 
Participant of festivals: "Faces of Modern Pianism" (2016, 2017), International Tchaikovsky Youth Festival (2018, 2019), International Festival named after Rachmaninoff's "White Lilac" (2018), XX International Festival "International Week of Conservatories" (2020), XI International Festival "Silver Lyre" (2020), "Pianissimo" (2022, 2023).
 
Performs on the leading stages of Moscow, St. Petersburg, other cities of Russia and abroad. December 2022 - the debut solo concert took place on the stage of the Great Hall of the St. Petersburg Philharmonic named after D.D. Shostakovich. February 2023, as part of the Piano Days Festival, - a debut solo concert took place on the stage of the Flagey Concert Hall in Brussels.
 
 
Program
Sergei Prokofiev: Four Extracts from Suite ‘The Love for Three Oranges’, Op.33bis
Maurice Ravel: Piano Concerto in G Major, M.83            
Dmitriy Shostakovich: Symphony No.5 in D minor, Op.47                    
 
(Please check program updates at the concert.)
 
Program
Sergei Prokofiev: Four Extracts from Suite ‘The Love for Three Oranges’, Op.33bis
Maurice Ravel: Piano Concerto in G Major, M.83            
Dmitriy Shostakovich: Symphony No.5 in D minor, Op.47                    
 
(Please check program updates at the concert.)
 
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